Question Alder Lake - Official Thread

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tamz_msc

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Hulk

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tamz_msc

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Also, based on everything that we've seen so far, Golden Cove seems to be on par or better in power efficiency than Zen 3 Core for Core, at the same clock. The inefficiency only stems from the massive all-core frequencies Intel is pushing the the flagship 12900k, especially. Looking forward to some detailed power analysis tomorrow.
Has there been any iso-clock testing with a reasonable workload like HEVC encoding at sane clock speeds? If not, I'd expect someone like The Stilt to come up with a perf vs power graph in something like Cinebench.
 

tamz_msc

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This is what I was getting at. From Ian's last ADL piece:

"For users who understand the former PL1/PL2 methodology, it still technically exists under the hood here, where Base is PL1 and Turbo is PL2, but Tau is effectively infinite for K processors. "
That is true if PL1=PL2, which no doubt will be set by most motherboards capable of sustaining such power levels.
 

Carfax83

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Also, based on everything that we've seen so far, Golden Cove seems to be on par or better in power efficiency than Zen 3 Core for Core, at the same clock. The inefficiency only stems from the massive all-core frequencies Intel is pushing the the flagship 12900k, especially. Looking forward to some detailed power analysis tomorrow.

Interesting, would you say that Intel 7 is fundamentally equal to TSMC 7nm+ or maybe better?
 

Zucker2k

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Feb 15, 2006
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Interesting, would you say that Intel 7 is fundamentally equal to TSMC 7nm+ or maybe better?
As implemented in Golden Cove and Zen 3 respectively, it's looking very much so. Unfortunately, the apple to apple test would be the i5 12400 vs R5 5600x test, both with 6 cores and 12 threads, but there's no sign of the former at the moment so we'd need to wait for a while longer.
It's become increasingly clear to me (and others have mentioned this as well) that the hybrid strategy Intel is employing in ADL is about conserving die space, and not so much a power saving strategy, even though that is inherent in the small core implementation.
 

eek2121

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Intresting no doubt, if we look at this comparison and what he said in year 2016.Raptor Lake will just follow same road or PL1 around 250W.


"William Holt, head of Intel’s Technology and Manufacturing Group, made the announcement at the International Solid State Circuits Conference (ISSCC) this past week, when discussing some of the options Intel is evaluating. These technologies aren’t coming next year or the year after — all of the tech in question would be introduced after 2021."

Zen3

yellow is stock, R5 cant eat more than 90W

green, Eco mode


Zen 4 will have the same or maybe even a little lower CPU power consumption.

Intel, "hm sacrifice speed to reduce power consumption". Unexpected competition arrived, blah forget it we don't care.

Maybe i'm crazy, but 125W TDP should be the absolute maximum TDP for Desktop processors.In real world year 2021 and future, "150W CPU package power" should be maximum and not a hair more.

I am going to disagree here. CPUs should scale to a given power limit, but should be able to run efficiently at lower power limits. If the 12900k can keep up with a 5900X with a power limit of 142W or less in the majority of benchmarks, Intel has done a great job. If they need a higher power limit
to match the 5900X, then they still have work to do.

Intel is giving users something AMD is not: guaranteed performance up to 241W. AMD will void your warranty.

With older Intel chips, they needed higher power limits, unrestricted turbo, etc. to be competitive. From what we have seen so far, ADL-S appears to compete just fine at 125W (I personally would like to see Ryzen lowered to 125W or ADL-S set to 142W for testing), and 241W just adds extra performance, to the point of possibly beating the $800 5950X in some scenarios.

We will see, however, I am personally a bit skeptical the 125W numbers will carry over into other workloads.

I am extremely interested in the 2+8 mobile SKU when it eventually gets announced. It appears it will absolutely smash the Zen 3 laptop chips. Maybe some enterprising user here can simulate one by lowering the power limit to 45W and disabling 6 large cores. 🤣
 
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Makaveli

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What I'd like to see is a a review that shows both package power and wall power for power consumption. Throughout the advent of the Zen architecture and subsequent iterations those chips always consume more power in gaming, even when churning out inferior fps. Something isn't right about a "power efficient" platform that is only power efficient when you measure power in software, but as soon as you measure at the wall it's no longer that power efficient.
Additionally, that platform is plagued with heat issues, and most enthusiasts resorting to undervolting and secondary cooling (even 5600x owners, a chip that supposedly consumes no more than 88watts tops at stock). Yeah, I've heard about heat spots and all that but guess what, Intel goes to 250w on the package alone and suffers from heat spotting too, and whatever other heating effects pumping 250w into your chip can cause. So, I think this needs to be looked into, the delta between wall and reported package power using a similar brand and tiered motherboard, a barebones bench table, and peripherals to reduce/eliminate any differences between setups.

1800x
View attachment 52270

2700x
View attachment 52271

3900x
View attachment 52272

5950x
View attachment 52273

What is this suppose to be showing that is full system power consumption.
 

Harry_Wild

Senior member
Dec 14, 2012
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G-Skill announces DDR5 7000MHz CL40 RAM

Intel's XMP 3.0 goes up to DDR5 6666MHz CL40
Woweeeee! Instant webpage rendering will be fun to see! 120hz better be double going forward for display technology.
 
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Markfw

Moderator Emeritus, Elite Member
May 16, 2002
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Of course. Did you read my accompanying post?
This part of your post is totally wrong "Throughout the advent of the Zen architecture and subsequent iterations those chips always consume more power in gaming, even when churning out inferior fps. "

In the first place, Zen 3 wins in almost all cases in games. And as for the rest, I don't remember them being power hogs, so I don't know where you get that. Looking at the 3900x, all the systems are within a few watts of each other. Not that I believe that, but its your own slide !

And why are we talking about Zen power consumption in an Alder Lake thread. No reviews to compare to yet....
 
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remsplease

Junior Member
Oct 22, 2021
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No it cant, DDR4 and DDR5 memory/stick is not physically compatible.

View attachment 52072

Agree w above. Taken one step further, boards can have both slot types present. Some will complain about interference issues having both 4 & 5 slots on one PCB. It's not a huge issue to implement with clean signaling across both planes. With the major limitation being only 2 slots for each memory type.


..When primary thread pool thread get assigned to E-core performance will suffer due thread-syncronization problems. Using different speed cores will bring lots of new problems - Intel optimization simply points to target priority threads only to high performance cores.
Priority is scaled for tasks and task-time across/between both core types.

..They expect to run their heavy stuff on one set of cores and dispatch lighter stuff to the second set of cores.

Latency is how fast they are going to react, not how fast they are going to complete a task..
Both core types are on the same bus with the same speed and latency characteristics. They react to instruction set queues at the same pace.

Per the scheduler rules, movement of threads within and between both groups of P and E cores is dynamic and move scheduling is granular.

Just wait till Intel moves on from 10nm to 7nm, it going be rocking again.
Alder Lake is actual 7nm process on an actual TSMC 7nm node.

It's become increasingly clear to me (and others have mentioned this as well) that the hybrid strategy Intel is employing in ADL is about conserving die space, and not so much a power saving strategy, even though that is inherent in the small core implementation.

The hybrid strategy is about adding an additional layer of timed threading to existing CPU architecture, processing and programming. Scaled efficiency.
 

Markfw

Moderator Emeritus, Elite Member
May 16, 2002
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This part of your post is totally wrong "Throughout the advent of the Zen architecture and subsequent iterations those chips always consume more power in gaming, even when churning out inferior fps. "

In the first place, Zen 3 wins in almost all cases in games. And as for the rest, I don't remember them being power hogs, so I don't know where you get that. Looking at the 3900x, all the systems are within a few watts of each other. Not that I believe that, but its your own slide !

And why are we talking about Zen power consumption in an Alder Lake thread. No reviews to compare to yet....
Oh, and not to derail this thread more than you already have, but those graphs do NOT take into account that the system could be getting more FPS with some systems, and the power draw could be the video card working harder for the better CPU. So saying ANYTHING about CPU power draw while gaming can NOT be gotten from those graphs.

Now lets get back to taking about Alder lake, until the reviews come out tomorrow, then we can discuss anything in the reviews, including power draw of both camp's CPU's.
 

Abwx

Lifer
Apr 2, 2011
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Yeah, 213 - 55. Still leaves you some odd 165w to work with. How're you doing your extrapolations?

213 - 55 = 158W

To wich you should account for losses in the PSU and in the VRMs for a grand ratio of 0.77.

122 W are left at the CPU level to wich we should add its idle power, something like 10-15W for a Vermeer, you can see that the 5950X use about 10W less than a 5900X and no more than a 5800X.

FTR the 5800X perf increase by a paltry 6% from 88W to 135W, likewise the tested ADL perf increase by 8% from 150W to 241W, that s what happen at the extremity of the processes and designs capabilities.
 

Zucker2k

Golden Member
Feb 15, 2006
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Oh, and not to derail this thread more than you already have, but those graphs do NOT take into account that the system could be getting more FPS with some systems, and the power draw could be the video card working harder for the better CPU. So saying ANYTHING about CPU power draw while gaming can NOT be gotten from those graphs.

Now lets get back to taking about Alder lake, until the reviews come out tomorrow, then we can discuss anything in the reviews, including power draw of both camp's CPU's.
All these may only be true in some instances for Zen 3. It's no secret, AMD platform is not gaming efficient. Intel was the defacto gaming king until Zen 3 yet the graph clearly shows AMD systems sucking significantly more power while producing less fps. Look up the gaming reviews for these chips. The argument you're advancing is the same argument I've advanced in the past, except that in those cases, Intel produced more fps while consuming less, meaning the gpu was working harder and consuming more as a result, but the platform still remained more power efficient. That shows the cpu is consuming significantly less.

 
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